He's a liberal. He supports Social Security, Medicare, the SNAP program, high and generous funding levels in education, health care... he's also very pro-union. He's to me, just a liberal Democrat on ideology. I think that for a lot of his career that word "liberal" (or "librul") was something you couldn't be or didn't want to be, because that word has and still has a negative connotation to so many people.
Even Donald Trump is not really that different from other conservative Republicans in the basic policy positions. Basically in 2024, you have a choice between a liberal vision and a conservative vision and I'm talking about the federal government - the kinds of people that they will appoint. It's in many ways an original argument about the size and scope of federal power, and also want government can and should do, and also how to spend money and on whom/what.